Antibiotics in Aquaculture Wastewater: Is It Feasible to Use a Photodegradation-Based Treatment for Their Removal?
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. The Use of Antibiotics in Aquaculture and the Spreading of Antimicrobial Resistance (AMR)
3. Photolysis of Aquaculture Antibiotics: Influencing Factors
3.1. Type of Light
Reference | Antibiotics | Irradiation | Relevant Conditions | Conclusions |
---|---|---|---|---|
[25] | ENR; CIP | UV and | ENR and CIP: 500 mg L−1 | CIP degraded faster with UV than with fluorescence light treatment; |
Fluorescence | Overlying water from an eel pond | no such difference was found for ENR | ||
[15] | TRIM; | Sunlight | River water related | t1/2 ranged from <1 to 44 days, depending on the availability of sunlight |
ENR; SDZ | to intensive aquaculture | TRIM was not susceptible to photodegradation, but ENR and SDZ were | ||
[27] | OMP | Simulated sunlight (450 W Xe lamp) | OMP: 36.8 mg L−1 or 368 mg L−1 | Photodegradation was higher in real samples in comparison with ultrapure water |
Water from aquaculture | DOM increased photodegradation in relation to direct photodegradation | |||
facilities and nearby stream | Indirect photodegradation pathway occurred by ·OH radicals, O2 attack, and reaction with 3DOM* | |||
[28] | OXA; FLU | UV simulated | OXA and FLU: 5000 mg L−1 | Light played a major role in the degradation of both OXA and FLU |
natural light | Water from aquaculture ponds | Temperature did not affect the photodegradation of both OXA and FLU | ||
[29] | CIP | Simulated sunlight | CIP: 1657 mg L−1 | Due to the Cu(II) complexation, photodegradation, photolytic pathways and |
(1000 W Xe lamp) | Ultrapure water | product distribution were altered | ||
[30] | OTC; OXA; FLU; FLO | Wavelength range | OTC, OXA, FLU, FLO: | FLO was not degraded by photolysis |
300–800 nm | 1000 mg L−1 | Photolysis was responsible for about 70% of the OTC degradation in both | ||
Deionised water, fresh | fresh and seawater and 10% of the OXA and FLU degradation in seawater | |||
and seawater | Water pH played an important role in OTC photolysis | |||
[31] | OTC | Simulated sunlight | OTC: 4 mg L−1 | t1/2 predicted for OTC ranged between 21 and 25 min |
(1500 W Xe lamp) | Water from aquaculture | High pH and presence of sea salts increased the OTC photodegradation | ||
facilities | rate in comparison with deionised water | |||
[32] | OTC | Simulated sunlight | OTC: 4 mg L−1 | Mg2+ inhibited the formation of some OTC photoproducts observed in the |
(1500 W Xe lamp) | Water from aquaculture | presence of Ca2+ | ||
facilities | Two new OTC photoproducts were formed in the presence of Mg2+ | |||
[33] | NOR | Simulated sunlight | NOR: 1597 mg L−1 | DOM influenced the photodegradation of NOR different species |
(350 W Xe lamp) | Ultrapure water | Influence was related with DOM concentration and type of NOR species | ||
[34] | THI; FLO | UV-vis: 300 W | THI and FLO: 2–30 mg L−1 | The photolysis kinetics in pure water was influenced by the initial |
high-pressure Hg | Ultrapure water | concentration of antibiotics | ||
lamp (λ > 200 nm) | Twelve intermediates were formed | |||
[24] | THI; FLO | UV-vis: 300 W | THI and FLO: 10–400 mg L−1 Ultrapure, sea and fresh water | Under UV-vis irradiation, antibiotics photodegraded the fastest in seawater, followed by ultrapure water and freshwater |
high-pressure Hg | ||||
lamp (λ > 200 nm) | Under solar (natural or simulated) sunlight, photodegradation occurred just in freshwater | |||
Sunlight: λ > 290 nm | ||||
Simulated sunlight: | ||||
1000 W Xe lamp | ||||
[35] | OXA | Simulated sunlight (1500 W Xe lamp) | OXA: 100 and 250 mg L−1 Fresh and brackish water | Photodegradation rate constant decreased from 0.70 ± 0.02 h−1 in ultrapure water to 0.42 ± 0.01 h−1 in freshwater and to 0.172 ± 0.003 h−1 in brackish water 1O2 played an important role in OXA photodegradation process |
3.2. Presence of Ions
3.3. Presence of Dissolved Organic Matter (DOM)
3.4. Relevance of Radical Oxygen Species (ROS)
3.5. Type of Matrix: Ultrapure Water, Aquaculture Representative Waters or Real Aquaculture Waters
3.6. Temperature
3.7. pH
3.8. Salinity
3.9. Initial Concentration of Antibiotic
4. Photocatalytic Removal of Aquaculture Antibiotics from Water: Types of Photocatalysts
4.1. TiO2-Based Photocatalysts
Reference | Antibiotics | Irradiation | Photocatalytic System | Conclusions |
---|---|---|---|---|
[67] | TC | UV | Calcite/TiO2 | A content of 1.5 g L−1 of catalyst, 50 mg L−1 of TC, and pH ≈ 7 were the best conditions to effectively remove TC under UV light |
[75] | CIP | Simulated sunlight | ZnSnO3 | Co-precipitation showed better performance and stability in comparison with hydrothermal and template-assisted methods |
The prepared photocatalyst catalysed the degradation of CIP under simulated light irradiation and the antibacterial activity of CIP was largely decreased | ||||
[76] | OTC; OXA | Sunlight and UV | Porphyrin@TiO2 | For OXA, the introduction of TiO2 as photocatalyst on the process caused a marked increase on photodegradation |
Under simulated solar irradiation (10 min), OTC photodegration was more than 30% larger than that of OXA | ||||
[82] | FLO | UV | UV/Na2S2O8 | Rate constant increased linearly with increased PS concentration |
Presence of anions adversely affected FLO degradation performance | ||||
[83] | OTC | Visible light (20 W fluorescent lights) | UV/ZnO and UV/CuO/ZnO | UV/CuO/ZnO system was found to be more efficient than UV/ZnO |
The 90% of OTC degradation was accomplished for 10:1 molar ratio of Zn2+/Cu2+ and 0.4 g L–1 Nanocomposite | ||||
[84] | SMM | UV | UV/Zeolite/TiO2 | Co-existent substances present in the aquaculture wastewater inhibited the photocatalytic decomposition of SMM |
[80] | FLU | Simulated sunlight (500 W m−2 irradiance) | Simulated solar light/TiO2 | The most important variable for FLU photodegradation was pH (optimal value ca. 6) |
FLU was completely eliminated within 30 min of irradiation | ||||
The 80% of mineralization was accomplished after 60 min of irradiation | ||||
[65] | OXA; OTC | Simulated sunlight (1700 W Xe lamp) | Solar light/TiO2 | Both single and mixture antibiotics’ solutions were used |
After complete removal of the antibiotics, photoproducts did not show antibacterial activity | ||||
[81] | FLU; NXA | Sunlight | TiO2 | Photo-Fenton was more efficient than TiO2 in the degradation of NXA |
Photo-Fenton | A high degree of mineralisation was achieved in short irradiation times | |||
[85] | THI | UV | UV/H2O2 | Photodegradation rate decreased with the increase of the initial THI concentration |
UV/persulfate | Photodegradation rate increased with increasing oxidant dosage | |||
[86] | SMX | High pressure Xe short arc lamp | Photo-assisted | Coupling nanofiltration with photocatalysts allowed for 80% of SMX removal |
nanofiltration | The membrane/photocatalyst system showed a good regeneration capacity | |||
[87] | FLU; OXA; | UV-A | TiO2 | Degradation of the quinolones was studied in mono-, binary and ternary compound systems |
NXA | Mono-compound systems showed the largest photocatalytic rates | |||
[88] | CHL | Low-pressure mercury lamp | UV/H2O2 | Antibacterial activity was absent after treatment, even at higher antibiotic initial concentrations than those commonly found in wastewaters |
4.2. Other Photocatalysts
5. Future Challenges: A Critical Approach
- -
- Studies on antibiotics remediation by photodegradation are less than they should be—it is still needed to enlarge the scope of this area of investigation;
- -
- In the specific case of the studies on antibiotics used in aquaculture, most of them approach the problem and investigate possible solutions but do not present a real application in aquaculture waters;
- -
- Real environments are much more complex than laboratory-controlled conditions, so it would be necessary to develop computational models to predict the aquatic photochemical behavior of aquaculture antibiotics, as well as their different dissociation and/or metal complexation forms under different conditions;
- -
- Further work on antibiotics’ mixtures should be carried out since they are mostly present simultaneously in real matrices and it may be anticipated that individual and simultaneous presence may represent a different behavior;
- -
- More studies are also needed in what respects mineralization since it is crucial to understand if the photolysis/photocatalysis treatments offer the desired mineralization of the compound into CO2 and H2O;
- -
- In the same line of thinking, antibacterial activity tests should be carried out to undoubtedly determine if, in the case of incomplete mineralization, photoproducts retain the activity of the parent compound—this is vital to consider if a treatment is effective;
- -
- Another shortage in literature is the lack of studies in continuous operation mode and of upscaling studies as opposed to batch discontinuous laboratory studies—water treatments are usually implemented under continuous feeding, and it is important to scale-up the studies so as to understand if they present potential to be applied in a real situation.
6. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Silva, C.P.; Louros, V.; Silva, V.; Otero, M.; Lima, D.L.D. Antibiotics in Aquaculture Wastewater: Is It Feasible to Use a Photodegradation-Based Treatment for Their Removal? Toxics 2021, 9, 194. https://doi.org/10.3390/toxics9080194
Silva CP, Louros V, Silva V, Otero M, Lima DLD. Antibiotics in Aquaculture Wastewater: Is It Feasible to Use a Photodegradation-Based Treatment for Their Removal? Toxics. 2021; 9(8):194. https://doi.org/10.3390/toxics9080194
Chicago/Turabian StyleSilva, Carla Patrícia, Vitória Louros, Valentina Silva, Marta Otero, and Diana L. D. Lima. 2021. "Antibiotics in Aquaculture Wastewater: Is It Feasible to Use a Photodegradation-Based Treatment for Their Removal?" Toxics 9, no. 8: 194. https://doi.org/10.3390/toxics9080194
APA StyleSilva, C. P., Louros, V., Silva, V., Otero, M., & Lima, D. L. D. (2021). Antibiotics in Aquaculture Wastewater: Is It Feasible to Use a Photodegradation-Based Treatment for Their Removal? Toxics, 9(8), 194. https://doi.org/10.3390/toxics9080194